Russian oil exports shift east

Russian oil companies have been eyeing the Asian markets with growing interest in recent years. Source: ITAR-TASS

Russian oil companies have been eyeing the Asian markets with growing interest in recent years. Source: ITAR-TASS

The expansion of new oil developments in Eastern Siberia along with a drop in exports to Europe indicates that Russia’s energy export strategy is changing.

Russia’s state-owned energy giant Rosneft has announced plans for additional investment in eastern Siberian oil fields, with the intention of increasing exports to Asia.

Sviatoslav Slavinsky, Rosneft vice president for economics and finance, said that the company will invest 3 trillion rubles ($83 billion) in developing a cluster of oil fields in the Krasnoyarsk Territory.  

"We are developing the Vankor cluster of oil and gas fields, which includes the Suzun, Tagul, and Lodochnoye fields," Slavinsky said at the recent Krasnoyarsk Economic Forum, which took place from Feb. 27-March 1. “We now also have a new asset there, the Taas-Yuryakh (the Srednebotubinskoye field) and the Yurubcheno-Tokhomskoye field.”

Slavinsky estimates that the investment will create 15,000 high-skilled jobs and generate about 8 trillion rubles ($2.2 million) in revenue for the state treasury. He added that annual oil production at the Vankor cluster alone could reach 55 million tons by 2025.

Rosneft had previously said that the Vankor cluster will produce 25 million tons of crude oil by 2019. Current production levels at the Vankor field are 21.4 million tons of oil and 6.55 billion cubic meters of natural gas. Rosneft began to develop the Tagul field last month.

Turning eastwards

Developing the Vankor cluster is part of the Russian oil giant's strategic plans to ramp up production in eastern Siberia. Oil from this region is destined mainly for exports to Mongolia, China and the Asia Pacific region.

According to CDU TEK, a data information center about the Russian energy sector, Russian oil exports to non-CIS countries fell by 2.2. percent in 2013 to 206.9 million tons. Exports to Europe fell 6 percent to 170m tons while at the same time, exports to Asia – primarily China – were up 15.6 percent to 37.1 million tons.

Russian oil companies have been eyeing the Asian markets with growing interest in recent years. “Right now, Europe remains our key export customer,” said Andrei Neshchadin, a professor at the Institute of Experts at the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entreprenuers. "But large investment in the Vankor cluster, where production will be destined almost solely for exports to China, will stimulate Asian exports.”

Rosneft is Russia’s largest exporter of crude to the Asian markets. In 2011 it began delivering 15 million tons of crude every year to the Chinese National Petroleum Company via the Skovorodino spur of the EasternSiberia-Pacific Ocean (ESPO) pipeline. By 2030, Rosneft will have exported 300 million tons via that route. A year ago, in March 2013, Rosneft and CNPC signed an agreement for an additional 365 million tons of oil to be supplied over the next 25 years.

The increase in Russian oil exports to Asia will come at the expense of exports to Europe.

“Prices in Southeast Asia are much higher than in Europe or the United States," said Anatoly Dmitrievsky, head of the Oil and Gas Studies Institute at the Russian Academy of Sciences, explaining the change in policy. “This is due to the rapidly growing demand in such developing economies as India and China. These are fast-growing economies, where growth generates more demand for oil. It is therefore only natural for the Russian oil industry to show such great interest in the Asian markets.”

According to Sergei Klubkov, head of Operational Efficiency and Portfolio Management, Oil and Gas, at the Energy Centre of Moscow School of Management Skolkovo, launch of Vankor block of fields (geologically located in Western Siberia) is important for maintaining production in Russia. The peak oil production at those fields can reach up to 35 mtpa by 2018-2019. Exporting oil from these fields to Asia wasn’t economically viable, however, it was an absolutely right decision to diversify export routes. Moreover, based on our estimates, peak production from Eastern Siberian discovered fields will not exceed 40 mtpa which is not enough to fill the full capacity of the ESPO pipeline. 

Neshchadin also thinks that shifting Russia’s oil exports eastward makes sense. Neshchadin said that in light of China’s rapid economic growth, even the most conservative estimates indicate that the country will need to increase its energy imports from Russia in the long term. Additionally, the growth of shale production in the United States will likely cause a drop in demand for Russian oil in the West.

Klubkov pointed out another reason for the change. The oil fields in the western part of Siberia are older and are producing less. He said that in the mid-term oil export to Europe is likely to fall while oil production in Western Siberia and Urals-Volga region is declining along with redirecting oil volumes to the East.

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